Edinburgh Research Archive

Towards a high-precision description of resonances through lattice simulations

dc.contributor.advisor
Portelli, Antonin
dc.contributor.advisor
Erben, Felix
dc.contributor.advisor
Pendleton, Brian
dc.contributor.advisor
Horsley, Roger
dc.contributor.author
Lachini, Nelson Pitanga
dc.contributor.sponsor
European Research Council
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dc.date.accessioned
2024-06-07T14:42:31Z
dc.date.available
2024-06-07T14:42:31Z
dc.date.issued
2024-06-07
dc.description.abstract
Resonances play a significant role in the phenomenology of the Standard Model. For example, many hadronic resonances are found in flavour-physics processes, which can be central to New Physics searches. The realistic determination of resonance parameters is an important step in the direction of understanding such phenomena. First-principles quantum chromodynamics (QCD) computations using lattice approaches have developed in the last two decades to the point where physical quark masses can now be directly employed. In this context, studying the dynamical properties of QCD, such as scattering amplitudes and resonances, has been challenging, but the development of nite-volume and computational techniques has made it feasible. In this work, we perform the first calculation of K*(892) and p(770) resonance parameters at physical quark masses with a reliable estimate of systematic uncertainties. This is done on a single domain-wall Nf = 2 + 1 RBC-UKQCD ensemble at the physical point. We begin by describing the phenomenological aspects of the strong interaction and the underlying quantum field theory. The algorithmic aspect of lattice QCD using the Monte Carlo method and the description of angular momentum on a cubic spatial lattice are reviewed. Next, we cover the formal groundwork of finitevolume quantum field theory that allows the extraction of scattering amplitudes from lattice observables. Determining the low-energy spectra is a key goal of lattice QCD. Using the developed open-source distillation library based on Grid and Hadrons, we compute finite-volume correlators on the physical-point ensemble. We construct a basis of operators to study ππ and Kπ scattering in the relevant channels. This involves using a generalised eigenvalue problem to compute optimised hadronic interpolators and obtain finite-volume energy levels. Finally, the optimised correlator data is used to extract scattering phase shifts and model-averaged p(770) and K*(892) resonance parameters via finite-volume effects.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/41865
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/4588
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
N. P. Lachini et al. “K scattering at physical pion mass using distillation”. In: Proceedings of Science 396 (2022), pp. 1–11. arXiv: 2112.09804
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dc.relation.hasversion
N. P. Lachini et al. “Towards K scattering with domain-wall fermions at the physical point using distillation”. In: Proceedings of The 39th International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory — PoS(LATTICE2022). Trieste, Italy: Sissa Medialab, 2023, p. 076. arXiv: arXiv:2211.16601v1
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dc.relation.hasversion
N. P. Lachini and F. B. Erben. “Distillation documentation - Hadrons”. In: https://aportelli.github.io/Hadrons-doc/#/mdistil (2022)
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dc.subject
Lattice Field Theory
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dc.subject
Quantum Chromodynamics
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dc.subject
Scattering
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dc.subject
Resonances
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dc.title
Towards a high-precision description of resonances through lattice simulations
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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